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The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 12:34 pm
by John Coffey
From: http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/scienc ... ology.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

A recent discussion started by John Lynch on the Society for Judgment and Decisionmaking listserv focuses on an interesting new article by Larrick and Soll in Science, entitled the "MPG Illusion." The paper reemphasizes the point that statistical metrics matter. It argues that the traditional miles per gallon metric leads people to make inaccurate judgments on the benefits of more efficient cars.

For example, Richard Larrick in his podcast makes an argument along the following lines. Say you have the ability to trade in a 10 MPG SUV for a 20 MPG crossover, or a 25 MPG car for a 50 MPG hybrid. Which switch is better for the environment? As it turns out, the former, even though one might be tempted to say that the former only improves efficiency by 10 MPG while the latter improves it by 25. Assume a 100 mile trip. The SUV will consume 10 gallons versus 5 gallons for the crossover for a net savings of 5 gallons. The car will consume 4 gallongs versus 2 gallons for the hybrid for a net savings of 2 gallons.

It seems that since we drive given distances (e.g. 100 mi), rather than specific amounts of fuel, the MPG is a misleading measure of efficiency. Small increases in efficiency down at the low end make much more of a difference than at the high end. Larrick & Soll argue that an inverse ratio, gallons per 10,000 miles, might be a more useful measure.

Re: The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 12:38 pm
by Jayson Woodruff
L/100km

Jay W

Re: The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 1:16 pm
by Will Kalman
Jayson Woodruff wrote:L/100km
People are always trying to change things. You give 'em and inch and they take a kilometer!

Re: The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 1:17 pm
by Bob Beamesderfer
That is part of the reason why Green Car Journal, and my erstwhile colleagues at Autobytel/MyRide.com, named the Chevy Tahoe Hybrid as SUV of the Year for 2007. [That's two separate awards, BTW.] :geek:

Re: The Psychology of Fuel Efficiency

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 2:23 pm
by Ashley Armstrong
L/100km always drove me CRAZY in the Canadian cars.